$CORZ just filed an amended quarterly report. That is the kind of disclosure event that tends to get glossed over as housekeeping. At Core Scientific, it fits a pattern of elevated filing activity that has been running alongside one of the stronger price recoveries in the Bitcoin miner category.
The 10-Q/A filed March 2, 2026 covers the period ending March 31, 2025. Amendments to quarterly reports can reflect anything from minor exhibit corrections to material restatements. The filing itself is the starting point for understanding which kind this is, and the SEC primary document is available at the EDGAR link in the filing record.
The Disclosure Cadence Is the Signal
$CORZ's Filing Risk Score sits at 100. That ceiling reading reflects the density and recency of material filings, not a judgment about the company's financial health. The same logic applies to Event Momentum, which also sits at the maximum. Together, those two signals say the same thing: Core Scientific has been generating a high volume of disclosure activity, and the amended quarterly report is another entry in that sequence.
For a Bitcoin miner and hosting operator, elevated disclosure cadence is not unusual during periods of capital structure change, contract renegotiation, or operational expansion. $CORZ emerged from bankruptcy in early 2024, which means the filing history over the past two years has been unusually dense by construction. The amended 10-Q lands in that context.
Revenue and the Operating Frame
The latest loaded revenue figure for $CORZ is $115.24 million for the period ending March 31, 2026. That number covers the most recent quarter in the fundamentals record, not the period covered by the amended filing. The distinction matters because the 10-Q/A addresses March 2025 operating results, while the revenue metric reflects where the business stands a full year later.
For a miner and hosting operator, quarterly revenue is a function of fleet size, power cost, Bitcoin price, and customer hosting demand. None of those variables are static. The BTC Exposure Score of 80 reflects how directly Bitcoin price movements flow into $CORZ's operating economics. At that level, the score places $CORZ firmly in the category where Bitcoin is central to the research case, not a peripheral input.
Price Recovery Running Ahead of Sentiment
$CORZ has gained roughly 112% over the trailing year through May 20, 2026, and is up approximately 59% year to date. The 52-week low of $9.77 was set in May 2025. The 52-week high of $25.17 was set just six days before the most recent price observation. The stock is trading above its 20-day, 50-day, and 200-day moving averages, with both short-term and long-term trend classifications pointing upward.
That price recovery is running against a crypto sentiment backdrop that reads as fear. The Crypto Fear and Greed index sat at 28 as of May 22, 2026, while Bitcoin dominance held at 58.1%, indicating the broader tape is Bitcoin-led rather than altcoin-driven. Bitcoin's 30-day realized volatility was estimated at 23.9% annualized, a calm regime relative to historical miner-equity volatility. For $CORZ specifically, the 20-day average true range of approximately $1.27 per share reflects active daily price movement even in a low-volatility Bitcoin environment.
The gap between the fear reading and the $CORZ price trend is worth holding in mind. Miner equities can run on operational and capital structure catalysts that are specific to the company even when broad crypto sentiment is cautious.
Insider Activity Sits Below the Noise Threshold
The Insider Activity Signal for $CORZ is 44, below the neutral 50 baseline. That reading reflects Form 4 activity that does not show unusual clustering, concentrated role activity, or outsized open-market transactions. Thirteen insider transactions are in the record. The low activity signal does not make those transactions uninformative, but it does mean the Form 4 tape is not generating a separate watch item on top of the filing cadence.
The Amended Filing Is the Next Read
The amended 10-Q is the document that resolves the open question here. Whether the amendment addresses a material restatement, a risk-factor revision, an exhibit correction, or something else entirely changes how much weight to assign to the elevated disclosure cadence. The filing is on EDGAR. Reading the amendment against the original 10-Q for the March 2025 period will show what changed and whether the change carries operating or accounting significance.
If the amendment reflects a restatement of financial results, the next watch item is whether $CORZ files additional amendments or whether the auditors issue updated commentary. If the amendment is procedural, the disclosure cadence signal stays elevated but the specific event loses urgency.
Research only. Not investment advice.